Author: admin

  • Microsoft Surface gets trolled for inexplicably showcasing iPad OS instead of Windows

    Microsoft Surface gets trolled for inexplicably showcasing iPad OS instead of Windows

    If there’s one thing that I find tiring about Satya Nadella’s Microsoft, it’s how poorly they treat their consumer businesses.

    I wrote previously about how Surface, Xbox, and Windows are all suffering from underfunding and cut corners, as Microsoft sinks billions into chasing artificial intelligence fads to hype up its share price. Many of Microsoft’s apps and services have become abandonware, such as Microsoft Authenticator, Launcher, and SwiftKey.


    Continue Reading

  • Exclusive: ASML becomes Mistral AI’s top shareholder after leading latest funding round, sources say – Reuters

    1. Exclusive: ASML becomes Mistral AI’s top shareholder after leading latest funding round, sources say  Reuters
    2. What is Mistral AI? Everything to know about the OpenAI competitor  TechCrunch
    3. Paris-Based Mistral AI Seeks $14B Valuation as Europe Charts Its Own A.I. Path  observer.com
    4. Microsoft-backed Mistral in talks to raise €2B: report (MSFT:NASDAQ)  Seeking Alpha
    5. Mistral Set for $14 Billion Valuation With New Funding Round  Bloomberg.com

    Continue Reading

  • robotic switchbot AI pet talks to people and displays emotions

    robotic switchbot AI pet talks to people and displays emotions

    robotic SwitchBot AI Pet makes facial expressions

     

    SwitchBot unveils AI Pet, a furry robotic teddy bear that talks to people, displays emotions, and ‘grows’ with its users. Revealed during the IFA Berlin 2025, which runs between September 5th and 9th, the device can sit in houses, converse with people, and assist users with their tasks and questions. It has two AI systems: the first one works within the robot, which processes the language. The other works on the internet servers.

    This one processes the ‘vision’, which allows the robotic SwitchBot AI Pet to use its cameras as eyes, microphones as ears, and speakers as a mouth. To make it more toy-like, the company dresses up the device with a fuzzy, furry material like fur. It allows the user not to be scared of the moving gadget, especially when it moves, blinks, shows emotions through its eyes, and speaks. Its face can also change colors and make different expressions.

    all images courtesy of SwitchBot

     

     

    Home gadget that can express happiness, sadness, and more

     

    The company says that the robotic SwitchBot AI Pet can show happiness, sadness, loneliness, hunger, and even jealousy, to name a few. Each emotion has its own facial pattern and voice sound, as well as body movement. Because the gadget is driven by AI, it can learn from its users through conversations and remember their faces and names, daily routines, house rooms, and even what they’ve talked about. All of these are stored in its memory data.

     

    The robot has cameras in the face to see its surroundings, and the installed AI system identifies what they see, as well as tracks motion. Because of its microphones, the robotic SwitchBot AI Pet can understand words and create voice responses. The team says it comes with a ‘synthetic’ voice to make the users feel as if they were just talking to a human. The device can answer questions, give advice, sing songs, play games, and even make jokes.

    robotic switchbot AI pet
    SwitchBot unveils AI Pet, a furry robotic teddy bear that talks to people and displays emotions

     

     

    responsive assistive device that can roll around

     

    When it comes to its physical movement, the robotic SwitchBot AI Pet can sit on surfaces and turn its head. Its eyes can move left and right, and its body can tilt forward and backward. It is because of the motors installed inside its body, positioned with sensors around them. The gadget can also connect to WiFi networks, which can allow it to send data to cloud servers and receive software updates. Through this, the device can download new features, too.

     

    Material-wise, the exterior of the robotic SwitchBot AI Pet uses soft, synthetic fabric, while the internal frame is wrapped with plastic components. The electronics use silicon chips, and the screen comes with LED technology. The size of the device is compact enough to fit bedside tables or shelves, and it is lightweight enough to be carried. Because of its wheels, it can roll around when the users ask it to go to them. It has an internal battery backup and goes into sleep mode to save power. The robotic SwitchBot AI Pet has been unveiled at the IFA Berlin 2025.

    robotic switchbot AI pet
    the robotic SwitchBot AI Pet can show happiness, sadness, loneliness, hunger, and even jealousy

    each emotion has its own facial pattern and voice sound, as well as body movement
    each emotion has its own facial pattern and voice sound, as well as body movement

    the robot has cameras in the face to see its surroundings
    the robot has cameras in the face and body to see its surroundings

    users can dress up the device, too
    users can dress up the device, too

     

     

    project info:

     

    name: Switchbot AI Pet

    company: Switchbot | @theswitchbot


    Continue Reading

  • Ultra-Processed Foods Made Healthy Young Men Gain Fat and Lose Sperm Quality in Just Three Weeks

    Ultra-Processed Foods Made Healthy Young Men Gain Fat and Lose Sperm Quality in Just Three Weeks

    Yet another study proving ultra-processed foods are bad, who would’ve thought? Credit: Wikimedia Commons

    For decades, the rising tide of obesity, diabetes, and declining sperm counts has puzzled doctors. Something in our modern world, it seemed, was fundamentally messing with our health. A new study offers a striking answer—and it may be hiding in your pantry.

    In a meticulously controlled trial, scientists from the University of Copenhagen and international partners found that ultra-processed foods—regardless of calorie content—disrupted hormone levels, increased body fat, and introduced pollutants linked to poor sperm quality.

    The findings, published last week in Cell Metabolism, deliver some of the most direct evidence yet that it’s not just how much we eat that matters—but what our food is made of, and how it’s made.

    “Our results prove that ultra-processed foods harm our reproductive and metabolic health, even if they’re not eaten in excess,” said Jessica Preston, lead author of the study. “This indicates that it is the processed nature of these foods that makes them harmful.”

    Same Calories, Different Outcomes

    The researchers recruited 43 healthy men between the ages of 20 and 35. Each participant followed two tightly controlled diets—one rich in ultra-processed foods and one based on unprocessed ingredients—for three weeks each, with a 12-week washout period in between.

    Crucially, both diets were matched for calories, macronutrients, and even protein, fat, and carbohydrate composition. Some participants received a normal caloric load; others received 500 extra calories per day to simulate overconsumption.

    But even under these tightly matched conditions, the ultra-processed diet stood out for all the wrong reasons.

    Men gained significantly more fat mass (about 1 kg) on the ultra-processed diet, whether or not they were overeating. Markers of metabolic health also worsened. Participants had increased cholesterol levels, higher LDL:HDL ratios, and a spike in diastolic blood pressure.

    Senior author Romain Barrès suggests these weren’t just random fluctuations. “We were shocked by how many body functions were disrupted by ultra-processed foods, even in healthy young men. The long-term implications are alarming and highlight the need to revise nutritional guidelines to better protect against chronic disease.”

    Hormonal Earthquake Served on a Plate

    Beyond weight gain and cholesterol, the ultra-processed diet altered several hormones involved in metabolism and reproduction.

    Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), essential for sperm production, dropped in participants on the ultra-processed diet. Testosterone levels trended lower. And total sperm motility—a key metric for male fertility—declined.

    At the same time, blood samples revealed a disturbing rise in phthalates, specifically a compound called cxMINP, a metabolite of the plasticizer diisononyl phthalate (DINP). Manufacturers often use these chemicals in packaging, and scientists classify them as endocrine disruptors.

    “The presence of cxMINP in higher levels after ultra-processed food consumption suggests that contaminants from packaging or processing may be leaching into the food supply,” the researchers wrote.

    Lithium and mercury—elements that play roles in brain and reproductive function—also declined in the blood and semen of participants on the ultra-processed diet. Though the long-term consequences of such changes remain unclear, the authors note that trace elements and hormone-disrupting pollutants are likely underestimated in these kinds of studies, due to the relatively clean nature of the experimental diets compared to participants’ usual eating habits.

    What Makes a Food “Ultra-Processed”?

    The study used the NOVA classification, a widely accepted system that ranks foods by their degree of processing. Ultra-processed foods (NOVA Group 4) include items made primarily from industrial formulations—think extruded snacks, frozen meals, soft drinks, and shelf-stable baked goods.

    These foods often include ingredients rarely found in home kitchens, like hydrolyzed proteins, maltodextrins, artificial flavorings, and stabilizers. They are engineered for convenience, long shelf life, and irresistible flavor.

    But at what cost?

    In the ultra-processed diet used in this study, over 77% of calories came from NOVA 4 foods. In contrast, the unprocessed diet drew 66% of calories from whole foods, including fresh fruits, vegetables, meats, and legumes.

    Both diets were delivered to participants’ homes, pre-portioned and ready to eat. The scientists monitored compliance with daily food diaries and questionnaires, ensuring the only variable was the nature of the food itself.

    Why Does This Matter?

    Ultra-processed foods have long been associated with poor health outcomes, such as higher risks of obesity, heart disease, cancer, and depression. But critics have often argued that these effects could be the result of overeating, not the food itself.

    This study, however, eliminates that excuse.

    By controlling for calories and macronutrients, the researchers isolated the effect of food processing. What they found is that even when people eat the same number of calories, the body responds very differently depending on how those calories are delivered.

    Ultra-processed diets led to greater fat gain, altered hormone levels, and changes in markers of inflammation and pollutant accumulation—even without excess calories.

    A Call for Change?

    Sperm counts have dropped by more than 50% since the 1970s, a trend documented across continents. At the same time, diets in countries like the U.S., U.K., and Australia have shifted dramatically: over half of daily calories now come from ultra-processed foods.

    The new study does not prove that processed foods alone are to blame for global fertility declines. But it strengthens a growing body of evidence that they may play a key role.

    The authors note that they limited their trial to three-week interventions. They have yet to determine whether the damage accumulates or normalizes over time.

    Still, the study provides a rare and controlled glimpse into the physiological cost of modern eating habits. And for many researchers, it tips the scales.

    The implications are wide-ranging. If the structure of our food—not just the nutrients—alters how we store fat, regulate hormones, and reproduce, then public health strategies may need a dramatic overhaul.

    Nutrition labels focusing solely on calories and fat content may be missing the bigger picture. And for consumers trying to navigate the supermarket aisle, it raises a thorny question: How much of what we’re eating is food—and how much is product?

    Continue Reading

  • Oscar Piastri concedes there were ‘valid reasons’ for McLaren team orders in Italian Grand Prix

    Oscar Piastri concedes there were ‘valid reasons’ for McLaren team orders in Italian Grand Prix

    Oscar Piastri lost out on a chance to extend his championship lead at the Italian Grand Prix as he followed late team orders to allow Lando Norris to retain second place.

    The Australian went into the weekend with a 34-point advantage over his papaya teammate, but immediately found himself on the back foot as he struggled to break into the top spot throughout practice.

    Qualifying then saw him take third place behind Norris, which is where he remained for the majority of the Italian Grand Prix as he focused on managing his tyres around the high-speed circuit.

    However, an agonisingly slow pitstop for the Briton handed Piastri an unexpected P2 on track after he had changed onto fresh tyres first – this didn’t last for long as he was ordered to hand the position back, prompting him to remark: “Is a slow pitstop part of racing?”.

    Asked after the race to reflect on the decision, he said: “There were clearly valid reasons for swapping back. Lando qualified ahead and was ahead for the whole race, so I get that. There’s just some things we need to discuss.”

    After enduring a long stint on medium tyres, the team asked Norris whether he would prefer to pit before or after his team mate. He agreed to go second as long as there was no threat of the Australian undercutting him, which is exactly what happened when an error led to a 5.9s stop when Norris swapped for soft tyres.

    Piastri reflected on the strategy choice, concluding: “We went so long that the soft seemed like a good tyre to put on, and we were just staying out for Safety Cars if we got any, but eventually Max got back into our pit window so there wasn’t any point staying out much longer. A little ‘inchident’ at the end!”

    His lead has now been cut to 31 points over Norris with nine rounds of the season remaining, and the tough weekend in Monza has given him plenty of points to focus on in his ongoing mission to claim his first title.

    “I think as a team we just didn’t have amazing pace today,” he summarised. “I think the first part of the race, we were struggling with balance quite a bit and then towards the end of the mediums stint, things actually came good.

    “I was happy and the pace was really strong, so yeah, some good things to learn there. Maybe not the best opening lap or two either, which didn’t really help things, but nothing too much to complain about.”

    Continue Reading

  • Liverpool vs Everton: Dream derby debut for Ornella Vignola shows potential at Everton

    Liverpool vs Everton: Dream derby debut for Ornella Vignola shows potential at Everton

    Liverpool had taken a 12th-minute lead at Anfield through Cornelia Kapocs and were well on top.

    But Vignola’s moment of magic in the 24th minute dragged her side back into the game.

    She raced past midfielder Ceri Holland, carrying the ball from the halfway line towards Liverpool’s area, and fired it past goalkeeper Faye Kirby from a tight angle.

    It was the spark Everton needed and Katja Snoeijs’ header on the stroke of half-time meant they went in at the break 2-1 up despite being heavily outplayed.

    Toffees boss Brian Sorensen admitted: “In football there are things that happen that can change things in a game at the flip of a coin. She brought us back from a very deep place.

    “I knew that we would come back then. I think that moment changed the game.”

    And how Everton came back. Sorensen switched things up at half-time, introducing club record signing Ruby Mace in midfield and added experience in defence.

    Vignola, who made two appearances for Barcelona at the start of her career, was braced for her opportunity nine minutes after the restart.

    She got two in as many minutes and scored both. Suddenly, Everton were 4-1 ahead and well on course to extending their unbeaten run in this fixture to eight games.

    Did Sorensen expect Vignola to have such an impact?

    “No! Not three goals from her,” he added. “I expected her to score which is why I started her. She was superb and she has been like that in training.

    “Her runs are so well-timed and the way she faces up and goes at players, she is excellent. She just wants to score.

    “I said to her afterwards she has set the benchmark for what I want to see. She is still a young player though, so let’s see. Today was a good debut.”

    Continue Reading

  • Bill Nighy, Imelda Staunton, George Mackay, Dominic West in ‘& Sons’

    Bill Nighy, Imelda Staunton, George Mackay, Dominic West in ‘& Sons’

    For Argentina’s Pablo Trapero, best known for his lauded crime drama “The Clan,” directing his first English-language feature film “& Sons,” feels both new and familiar. 

    An adaptation of David Gilbert’s eponymous novel co-penned by Oscar-winning screenwriter Sarah Polley (“Women Talking”) and Trapero, the drama, which world premieres Sept. 7 at TIFF, centers on world famous writer A.N. Dyer who is shaken by the demise of a close friend. Facing his own mortality, he summons his estranged sons in a bid to reconcile with them. But when they arrive, he reveals something too farfetched to believe. 

    Bill Nighy (“Love, Actually”) plays Dyer, Imelda Staunton (“Downton Abbey”) his divorced wife while Dominic West (“The Crown”) plays a pivotal supporting role. They lead a stellar cast which includes Anna Geislerová (“Anthropoid”) as well as George Mackay (“1917”) and Johnny Flynn (“One Life) as the older estranged sons while Noah Jupe (“A Quiet Place”) plays the youngest, Andy.

    While he has worked on English-language series before, “Echo 3” for AppleTV+ and multi-lingual skein “ZeroZeroZero,” “& Sons” is indeed Trapero’s first English-language film but also marks the first time that he has worked with an impressive number of BAFTA-winning and/or nominated actors in one project. And in the case of Nighy and Staunton, Oscar-nominated to boot. 

    The notable pedigree also lies behind the camera. It’s scored by Emmy-winning “The White Lotus” composer Cristobal Tapia de Veer. Multi-Emmy winning casting maven Nina Gold (“Baby Reindeer”) assembled the stellar cast. 

    Trapero notes: “I’ve been making films for many years, and my cast—especially Bill, Imelda and Dominic—are internationally acclaimed, well-established actors. And yet, they approached every line as if it were their first film, with the same passion and drive to give the best possible performance.” 

    In a way, “& Sons” reminds him of his last film “The Quietude” or even “The Clan” or “Rolling Family,” all of which bear themes he’s always been deeply interested in exploring: “Not just [about] the family we’re born into, but the bonds we form with those around us. That emotional circle can be your blood relatives, your friends, your co-workers—it’s the group that gives us a sense of belonging… or, just as powerfully, the feeling of not belonging anywhere.”

    In adapting the story, he decided to set it in the U.K. instead of the novel’s original New York setting. “The story moves in a slightly abstract house, in a somewhat undefined setting. While you might recognize Oxford or certain parts of London, the heart of the story unfolds in a more ambiguous space. It could be any house, in any city—or in this case, somewhere quiet and removed from the noise, like the countryside,” he explains.

    “There was a real sense of care and mutual respect on set,” he relates, adding: “The scenes we were filming didn’t resemble anything I had done before—and the same was true for Bill. Every time we approached a new line, it was about discovering its meaning, its weight. The same went for a close-up or a specific camera movement—finding the value in each choice. That’s what made it so special: we were all experienced professionals, but there was still this deep commitment and a shared desire to keep experimenting,” he muses. 

    Adding: “And to feel surrounded by people who approach everything with the same kind of passion we had back when we were making short films in film school—that’s just incredible.”

    “& Sons” is produced by Infinity Hill (Axel Kuschevatzky, Phin Glynn and Cindy Teperman), Toronto-based Elevation Pictures (Christina Piovesan and Emily Kulasa) and Maven Screen Media’s Trudie Styler, Celine Rattray and Jackie Donohoe. 

    Trapero also produced through his own shingle, Matanza Cine.  

    & Sons, Courtesy of Elevation Pictures

    Continue Reading

  • 'Five Eyes' ministers meet to discuss smashing people smuggling gangs, UK says – Reuters

    1. ‘Five Eyes’ ministers meet to discuss smashing people smuggling gangs, UK says  Reuters
    2. Shabana becomes home minister in UK cabinet shakeup  Dawn
    3. Shabana Mahmood to host Five Eyes meeting on people-smuggling  The Guardian
    4. Who is Shabana Mahmood? UK’s first-ever Pakistani-origin, Muslim home secretary  Geo.tv
    5. Mahmood will be ‘just as tough’ on Palestine Action as Cooper, Healey says  The Independent

    Continue Reading

  • India warns Pakistan of high floods as displaced reach 1.8M

    India warns Pakistan of high floods as displaced reach 1.8M

    India has alerted Pakistan of “high floods” on the Sutlej River as northeastern regions brace for another powerful monsoon spell, with the number of displaced people climbing to nearly 2 million, officials said Sunday.

    The Indian High Commission in Islamabad informed Pakistani authorities of “high-level” flooding in the Sutlej, according to the Water Resources Ministry. Authorities warned that the surge would affect downstream districts already struggling with severe inundation.

    New Delhi has been relaying such warnings through diplomatic channels rather than via the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty, which governs water sharing between the two countries. India suspended use of the treaty in April following an attack in the Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 tourists.

    The Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) issued an alert, urging officials to activate early warning systems, disseminate evacuation information, and reinforce embankments.

    In Multan, located between the Sutlej and Chenab rivers, floodwaters breached at least three embankments, inundating dozens of villages. Pirwala town was among the worst-hit, with torrents submerging homes, farmland, and standing crops.

    Footage broadcast by Geo News showed residents wading through waist-deep water carrying belongings, while rescuers used boats to move people to safer areas. At least five people were killed Saturday when a rescue boat carrying 30 people capsized near Multan.

    The southern Sindh province is bracing for medium to high floods as the deluges swell the Indus River.

    Irfan Ali Kathia, director general of the PDMA, told Anadolu that the number of displaced in Punjab province alone has reached 1.8 million, with 4.1 million people affected overall.

    According to the National Disaster Management Authority, rains and floods since late June have killed 907 people and injured thousands more across Pakistan.

    The Meteorological Department forecast another major monsoon spell beginning Monday in several parts of Punjab.

    Continue Reading

  • Disruption to Jaguar Land Rover after cyber-attack may last until October | Jaguar Land Rover

    Disruption to Jaguar Land Rover after cyber-attack may last until October | Jaguar Land Rover

    Production at Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) and dozens of its suppliers is to remain on hold for at least this week, with disruption from a crippling cyber-attack at the carmaker expected to last until October.

    The UK’s biggest car manufacturer, owned by India’s Tata group, halted production at the sites after discovering hackers had infiltrated its systems a week ago.

    Thousands of production workers at the UK’s biggest car manufacturing sites in Halewood on Merseyside, and Solihull and Wolverhampton in the West Midlands have already been told to stay away until Tuesday. They will continue to be paid as usual and “bank” their hours to be picked up later on.

    JLR will update workers on Monday on plans for later in the week. It is thought likely that thousands will be kept on pause until at least Thursday and probably beyond at JLR’s own operations in the UK and in Slovakia, Brazil and India as well as at dozens of suppliers.

    Evtec, WHS Plastics, SurTec and OPmobility, who employ more than 6,000 in the UK between them, are among the suppliers who have told their workforces to stay at home, according to a report in the Sunday Times.

    There is speculation that operations at JLR will be disrupted for “most of September” or worse, the paper said.

    A recent cyber-attack on Marks & Spencer stopped its online orders for more than six weeks, with wider disruption continuing beyond that point. Similar attacks on the Co-op and Harrods, which were detected more swiftly, had less of an impact.

    Those attacks led to personal details for thousands of their customers being accessed. JLR is understood to have informed the Information Commissioner’s Office last week about the incident, flagging the risk of data being infiltrated, but there is no evidence of any such breach at this stage.

    However, JLR is having to operate without dozens of digital systems, with access cut off to databases, including those for spare parts. Sources said car dealerships and garages were able to continue operating but with severe disruption as they turned to phone calls and manual systems – in some cases pen and paper – to register vehicles and secure spare parts.

    A spokesperson for JLR said: “We continue to work around the clock to restart our global applications in a controlled and safe manner following the recent cyber incident. We are working with third-party cybersecurity specialists and alongside law enforcement.

    “We want to thank all our customers, partners, suppliers and colleagues for their patience and support. We are very sorry for the disruption this incident has caused. Our retail partners remain open and we will continue to provide further updates.”

    On Wednesday, a group of English-speaking hackers linked to the retail hacks claimed responsibility for the JLR attack. Screenshots were posted on a Telegram channel amalgamating the names of hacking groups known as Scattered Spider, Lapsus$ and ShinyHunters.

    Continue Reading